Archaeology of Mountain Landscapes
Presenters and Abstracts
Felipe Criado-BoadoStairways to heaven: mountains as sacred topographies........................................................3
José Alejandro Beltrán-CaballeroLandscape-shaping in the Andes: the case of Cusco as inka capital........................................3
Robert BrunswigExploring Seasonal Transhumance of Hunter-Gatherers and Neolithic Pastoralists in Poland’s High Tatras and Foothill Lowlands: Applying Landscape Archaeology Methodologies from theColorado Rockies to the Western Carpathians.........................................................................4
Michael R. CoughlanHolocene anthropization of mid-elevation landscapes around Pic d’Orhy, Western Pyrenees..................................................................................................................................................... 5
Michael L. Galaty Agro-Pastoralism in a Dispersed Village, Mountain Economy: Results of the Shala Valley Project, Northern Albania..........................................................................................................6
Emilie GauthierFarmers in mountainous and subarctic areas: a diachronic history of land use and adaptation to environmental conditions......................................................................................................7
Mercourios GeorgiadisResearch at the Late Bronze Age peak sanctuary on Mt Leska, Kythera (Greece).................8
Adriano La ReginaAncient pastoralism and settlements in Central Italy mountains............................................8
Yannick MirasAddressing the complexity of the palaeoenvironmental impact of Prehistoric settlement and Protohistoric urbanism in the Auvergne mountains (Massif Central, France).......................9
Franco NicolisCentral Alpine environments as Mountain Cultural Lanscapes from prehistory to contemporary present..............................................................................................................10
Klaus OegglThe onset of alpine pastoral systems in the Eastern Alps........................................................11
Héctor A. Orengo Coastal Mediterranean Mountains: a neglected archaeological register for the study of the firstcomplex societies.......................................................................................................................12
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Josep M. Palet Landscape Archaeology in Eastern Pyrenees high mountain areas (Segre & Ter valleys): human activities in the shaping of Mountain Cultural Landscapes.......................................12
Christopher Prescott Norway's mountain landscapes: national romantic legends and the political economy of agropastoralism.......................................................................................................................14
Sabine Reinhold From mobile pastoralism to combined mountain economy – the Late Bronze Age in the North Caucasus................................................................................................................................... 15
Phillips Stevens The Sacred Mount.....................................................................................................................16
Pawel Valde Novak Agro- or pastoral thinking about Mid-Mountains Neolithisation..........................................16
Ralf Vandam: Hate or love? Exploring the relationship between the marginal landscapes of the Western Taurus Mountains, SW Anatolia, and past communities...................................17
Martjin Van Leusen: Developing a systematic approach to the archaeological study of mountain landscapes: the Raganello Basin experience..........................................................18
Cecilia Dal Zovo Archaeology of a sacred mountain: longue duree, mobile pastoralism, and monumental landscapes in Eastern Eurasia.................................................................................................19
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Keynote: Stairways to heaven: mountains as sacred topographies
Felipe Criado-Boado (Institute of Heritage Sciences -Incipit-, Spanish National Research
Council -CSIC-)
In many cultural traditions, mountains are considered as privileged sacred topographies that connect
the earth and the heavens, the underworld and the upper world, the landscape and the skyscape.
However, for practical reasons, this aspect of mountains has scarcely been explored in landscape
archaeology despite the fact they served as visual markers, as focal points for orientating and
permitting movement throughout a territory, as areas with special resources, and as a part of major
herding routes or destinations. Although these aspects are very much alive in certain parts of the
world, such as the Andes, they have fallen into disuse in Europe, and this could be the reason behind
this relative lack of awareness of and interest in research about this dimension of mountains. While
the presentation will focus on late prehistory in Galicia (NW Iberia), together with a number of
examples from Europe (Valcamonica), Asia (Mongolia) and Southern America (Andes), I would like to
mention a good example of the importance of this subject: the relevance of the town of Santiago de
Compostela (in Galicia) as a pilgrimage destination is known throughout the world, but what it is less
widely known is that tradition of Santiago was based on an old sacred mountain: Santiago became the
materialization of an earlier cosmological landscape.
Landscape-shaping in the Andes: the case of Cusco as inka capital
José Alejandro Beltrán-Caballero (Seminar of Ancient Topography, Rovira i Virgili
University); Ricardo Mar (Seminar of Ancient Topography, Rovira i Virgili University) &
Joaquín Ruiz de Arbulo (Seminar of Ancient Topography, Rovira i Virgili University)
During inka time Cusco was the core of a hierarchical system of settlements with different sizes and
functions. A dense network of roads based on the four main branches of Qhapaq Ñan linked those
settlements with the ceremonial centre of the system located on the top of Watanay valley. The whole
valley was fed by a numerous terraces and canals for advanced agriculture. The symbolic appropriation
of this territory was based on the maintenance of hundreds of “wakas” -or sacred places- and shrines
around which the population was gathered during the important days marked on the calendar.
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Cusco is one of the most remarkable examples of a pre-Hispanic settlement in the Americas.
Traditionally, the idea of inka Cusco as a city is related to the space limited by two canalized streams:
the rivers Saphy and Tullumayo. The settlement placed in this hillside that forms the head of the valley
was just the Representative or Ceremonial Center. An extensive network of settlements exceeded this
limit to extend over the valley slopes occupying what is now the modern city of Cusco. The foundation
of Cusco involved the complete reorganization of the natural environment in the Valley of the Watanay
River. Land drainage, torrents channeling and construction of terraces and settlements guaranteed a
balance between the water resources of the Valley and the maintenance of the apparatus of the inka
capital.
Springs, rocks, rivers and mountains influenced the spatial relationships at all levels; they were
references, ceremonial sequences, limits and memory. The case of inka Cusco illustrates a way of
thinking and understanding the natural environment not only as the context for the development of an
activity, but also as the facilitator in itself of human activities. The case of Cusco is an example of a
millennial cultural process. The works accomplished by inka people are not only the expression of
genius and inventiveness but the product of ancient Andean traditions which generated responses
based on the deep knowledge of the environment. This research carried out since 2009 by the Seminar
on Ancient Topography research group (SETOPANT-URV) in cooperation with the Municipality of
Cusco and the National Museum of the American Indian-Smithsonian Institution seeks to
reconstruction the cultural landscape that completely transformed the Valley in inka time.
Exploring Seasonal Transhumance of Hunter-Gatherers and Neolithic Pastoralists in Poland’s High
Tatras and Foothill Lowlands: Applying Landscape Archaeology Methodologies from the Colorado
Rockies to the Western Carpathians
Robert H. Brunswig (Department of Anthropology, University of Northern Colorado);
Pawel Valde-Nowak (Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University)
This paper’s authors represent decades of mountain landscapes research in different world regions,
Robert Brunswig in the Southern Rocky Mountains (USA) and Pawel Valde-Nowak in the Harz and
Schwarzwald Mountains (Germany) and Western Carpathian Mountains (Poland and Slovakia). Rocky
Mountain landscape studies modeled eleven thousand years of seasonal transhumance by Native
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American hunter-gatherers from lower elevation mountain valleys to high elevation forest and tundra,
following seasonal migrations of game animals. The Rocky Mountain landscapes modeling was based
on more than two decades of high and mid elevation mountain archaeology surveys and supporting
paleoclimate studies. Western Carpathian research has, among many other cultural periods, been
successful in reconstructing Neolithic pastoralist and farming community life in mid and low
mountain landscapes. Both scholars, drawing on their experience and past mountain landscape
studies, describe an emerging, early stage research project designed to conduct advanced field studies
and generate (and test) archaeological landscape models of past hunter-gatherer populations as well as
pastoralist and early farming community seasonal transhumance migrations between lowland river
valleys of the Podhale Basin and high altitude forests and meadows of Poland’s High Tatra Mountains.
Holocene anthropization of mid-elevation landscapes around Pic d’Orhy, Western Pyrenees.
Michael R. Coughlan (Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia); Ted L
Gragson (Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia and IdEx Chair, Université de
Toulouse); David Leigh (Department of Geography, University of Georgia); Mélanie Le
Couédic (ITEM, Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour)
Prevailing syntheses of paleoecological and archaeological evidence suggest that middle Holocene
agropastoral land use activities in the Pyrenees region mark the onset of mid-elevation (900-2000
msl) anthropization of mountain landscapes. Extrapolating regional interpretations to the scale of a
landscape can and has led to simplistic and deterministic accounts about the human capacity to
transform upland regions. Our place-based and local-scale investigations in the French western
Pyrenees provide evidence for long-term, spatially heterogeneous anthropization processes in
landscapes around Pic d’Orhy. Elsewhere we have examined the causal processes that redirect
pedogenic pathways in the millennial history of human influence on these landscapes. Here we use
Bayesian chronological methods to synthesize new and previously obtained radiocarbon results with
evidence obtained from geomorphic, archaeological, and historical archives that serve to identify the
processes of anthropization.
Our results indicate that geomorphic and archaeological signatures of human activities in mid-
elevation areas fit into three temporal clusters that fall broadly within the Bronze Age, the Iron Age,
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and the late middle ages/early modern period. The first two clusters comprised of three sites each
appear to be coincident with the onset and culmination of the initial forest-to-pasture transition (ca.
4000-3200 cal yr BP). The third cluster dates a proliferation of seasonal pastoral habitation structures
and associated features to the late Middle Ages to the 19th century. Historical evidence implies that
these dates identify intensification of dairying activities associated with additional forest clearance,
much of which has since reforested. Although our conclusions remain limited by our ability to collect
datable evidence, the paucity of earlier sites associated with the most persistent forest to pasture
transition is striking. We hypothesize that positive socioecological feedbacks involving earlier,
extensive land use left a greater anthropogenic fingerprint on vegetation patterns than the more
intensive agropastoralism of the last millennium.
Agro-Pastoralism in a Dispersed Village, Mountain Economy: Results of the Shala Valley Project,
Northern Albania
Michael L. Galaty (Mississippi State University)
The Shala Valley Project (SVP) was a five-year, NSF-sponsored regional (ethno-)archaeological project
focused on the Shala Valley of northern Albania. Shala is located in the Bjeshkët e Namuna
(“Accursed”) mountains and is home to the Shala “tribe” (Alb. fis). Northern Albania is the only place
in Europe where tribal groups, with origins in the Late Medieval period, survived intact into the 21st
century, with chiefs, councils of elders, feuds, and an oral customary law code. The SVP conducted
intensive archaeological, architectural, and ethnographic surveys throughout all of Shala, with a
particular focus on the village of Theth. Results were published in a 2013 monograph titled Light and
Shadow: Isolation and Interaction in the Shala Valley of Northern Albania (Cotsen UCLA). One
particularly interesting result of the project was an ability to investigate mountain agro-pastoralism
systematically, through time. The agro-pastoral economy of Shala depends on a so-called dispersed,
i.e. non-nucleated, village system. Houses are organized into “neighborhoods” (based on lineage
affiliations) that, in Theth, are on average 700 m apart. This matches Stone’s (1991) statistics for the
Kofyar, who live in Nigeria in dispersed villages and depend on complex networks of reciprocal labor.
Theth’s village system and built environment are a direct reflection of similar networks of reciprocal
labor, that support an agro-pastoral lifestyle, but also reinforce the kinship-based sociopolitical
system, based on ideologies of honor and hospitality. When such ideologies break down, feuds ensue.
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Identification of dispersed village systems in the archaeological record may therefore signal agro-
pastoral lifestyles, particular ideological systems, or both.
Farmers in mountainous and subarctic areas: a diachronic history of land use and adaptation to
environmental conditions.
Emilie Gauthier (University of Franche-Comté, UMR CNRS 6249 Chrono-Environnement)
Human settlement and adaptation of farming activities in marginal zones, eg mountainous and
arctic/subarctic areas, has often focused the interest of paleo-environmentalists. Archaeological data
and sometimes historical data are of course essential to interpret these paleo-environmental data. In
the Jura Mountains (Eastern France), the abundance of sedimentary archives, lakes and peat bogs, has
enabled the development of diachronic and multiproxy studies describing the evolution of human
impact on vegetation since the appearance of agro-pastoral activities. However, seven millennia of
human pressure made difficult to disentangle climate and human forcing. Furthermore, agriculture
has evolved and the succession of different kinds of agrarian systems has played an important role in
the shaping of modern landscape. Nevertheless, the identification of different land uses, through
pollen analysis for instance, is possible and brings a new interpretation of ‘impact’. Simplest pattern
can be found in Northern regions, at the limit of sustainable agriculture, for instance in Greenland.
The Norse colonization of Greenland, beginning by the end of the 10th century, lasted more than 400
years. It resulted in the introduction of a northwest European-style of pastoral farming to a ‘pristine’
environment. This example allows the study of a short impact, from the landnám to the demise, and
the following environmental resilience. The development of modern farming since the beginning of the
20th century also enables a comparison between medieval and recent impact at the light of climate
change. In this case, the multiplication of multiproxy analyses, with biotic and abiotic parameters,
allows a better understanding of the notion of ‘impact’ on vegetation and soil in the catchment area,
and on the lacustrine ecosystem.
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Research at the Late Bronze Age peak sanctuary on Mt Leska, Kythera (Greece)
Mercourios Georgiadis (University of Nottingham)
A small scale survey and a more extensive excavation at Mt Leska on the island of Kythera in Greece
has provided a new and very important site, a peak sanctuary of the Middle and Late Bronze Age (19th
to 15th century BC). The research was conducted within a mountainous landscape at Kythera island,
which revealed a unique context that combined a number of habitation sites and complex sacred
locales. The most prominent site has been found on top of Mt Leska, which proved to be peak
sanctuary with similarities to one more recovered on Kythera and a few more on Crete. The excavation
at this site has provided a unique insight in the rituals conducted and the beliefs that existed at this
site and the Aegean more broadly. The landscape played a prominent role at this sacred site with the
environmental setting of Leska being a central one as well as the access routes to it, and the views
provided from this location. The study of the material remains has provided the sacred as well as the
social role of this site in a wider part of the island. The type of the research conducted during this study
has provided a broader outlook of a mountainous landscape in which there was an important site
among others. This study has provided a new methodological approach of archaeological research and
understanding in which the landscape played a central role, while the thorough analysis of the finds
has allowed a better comprehension of rituals conducted within a specific sacred site. These two
elements have provided interconnected data that allowed to identify in more details the beliefs and the
meaning of this site to the people using this sacred locale at Kythera during the Middle and Late
Bronze Age.
Ancient pastoralism and settlements in Central Italy mountains
Adriano La Regina (Istituto Nazionale di Archeologia e Storia dell’Arte, Roma).
Pre-Roman settlements and hill-forts controlled the routes of seasonal migration of herds in Central
Italy highlands. Transhumance roads, which linked the high pasture of Samnium with the plains of
Apulia, survived through the Roman rule, as calles publicae, and through the middle ages down to
modern times. Roman towns as Peltuinum, Sulmo, Aesernia, Bovianum, Saepinum, rose nearby them.
These large (110 m, 360 ft) millenary routes, called tratturi, are no longer in use since the end of
pastoralism, but they since still mark the landscape for hundreds of miles.
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Addressing the complexity of the palaeoenvironmental impact of Prehistoric settlement and
Protohistoric urbanism in the Auvergne mountains (Massif Central, France)
Yannick Miras (CNRS, UMR 6042, GEOLAB. Clermont Université, Université Blaise Pascal);
Paul M. Ledger (CNRS, UMR 6042, GEOLAB. Clermont Université, Université Blaise
Pascal); Michela Mariani (School of Geography, The University of Melbourne); Aude
Beauger (CNRS, UMR 6042, GEOLAB. Clermont Université, Université Blaise Pascal);
Marlène Lavrieux (Institut des Sciences de la Terre (ISTO), UMR 6113 CNRS / Université
d'Orléans / University of Basel, Department of Environmental Sciences); Karen Seieyssol
(Laboratoire EVS-ISTHME, UMR 5600- CNRS, Université de Lyon); Ansis Blaus (Institute of
Geology, Tallinn University of Technology); Machteld Caspers (Department of Physical
Geography. Utrecht); Anton Hansson (Department of Geology, Lund University)
Most palaeoecological research carried out in Central and Western Europe has been primarily focused
on tracing long term Holocene vegetation dynamics and also discerning if climate or human activity is
the main driving force in landscape change. More recent integrated palaeoenvironmental studies have
instead focused on unravelling the localised environmental impact associated with human settlements.
This is a much needed approach in the study of mountainous areas which are spatially heterogeneous
with a diversified resource distribution. Past human societies have taken advantage of such landscape
diversity developing complex land use patterns which are patchily distributed in time and space. This
results in the configuration of mosaic-like anthropogenic cultural landscapes. We present
palaeoenvironmental research conducted in Auvergne, central France, and performed following a high
spatio-temporal resolution in 2 case-study windows ranged in the same drainage basin of the Veyre
River and connecting the mountainous Chaîne des Puys, in the upstream area, and the intra-
mountainous Limagne plain, in the downstream area of the river. This comparison of “upland vs
lowland” allows a discussion of: (1) the complexity of palaeoenvironmental impacts associated with
Prehistoric and Proto-historic human settlement in terms of woodland clearance, landscape openness,
evidence for agriculture and spatio-temporal variabilities at a micro-local scale, (2) the
characterization of the palaeoenvironmental features related to the slow and chaotic development of
proto-urban areas during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age, (3) how these two complementary
areas operated together through time, and (4) the environmental consequences of these early human
societies on ecological processes (eg. vegetation biodiversity) and aquatic ecosystem functioning (e.g.
eutrophication of water bodies). The palaeoecological research presented here is based on: (1) the
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inter-correlation of different complementary biotic indicators- pollen and spores, non-pollen
palynomorphs (e.g. fungal spores, different resting spores and eggs of respectively phyto- and
zooplankton, stomata, parasitic cysts), diatoms- and abiotic ones (sedimentology), and (2) the
integration of palaeoecological and archaeological data.
Central Alpine environments as Mountain Cultural Lanscapes from prehistory to contemporary
present.
Franco Nicolis (Archaeological Heritage Office, Autonomous Province of Trento)
The current framework of knowledge as regards human occupation of the alpine environment in
ancient times is no longer conditioned by the traditional image of poor, inhospitable areas inhabited
by coarse, warlike peoples. On the contrary, the prevailing picture today is of regions with considerable
economic potential, regularly exploited by groups of humans settling there. A case study site will be
presented where a series of clues have been found suggesting pioneering colonisation of the high
mountains in the period between the end of the Early Bronze Age and the beginning of the Middle
Bronze Age. The data obtained from this site has made it possible to reconstruct the embryonic stage
of a process that was to lead to a new model of exploitation and economic development.
During the Late and Final Bronze Age (second half of the 14th century- 11th century BC) the metal
production and diffusion in Europe develops into a continental-size organized system. Within this
frame a substantial copper metal production is observed in the highlands of the Trentino area
undoubtedly related to diffusion of the products within a larger area. Here, archaeological sites
showing traces of metallurgical activity are usually located a few kilometres from the closest known
copper occurrences, and in places well served by travelling routes, abundant wood supply, and water
sources.
In recent time, global warming and absence of regular and abundant snowfall in the Alps has
prevented glacial basins from compensating for the effects of summer melting. This is changing the
alpine landscape. The retreating of the glaciers is a climatic emergency, but is taking with it a cultural
emergency. The melting of ice is bringing to light evidence of the human presence at high altitudes
from prehistory to contemporary times. The icon of this phenomenon is Iceman, the Copper Age
mummy discovered in September 1991 in Schnalstal. But a lot of other evidence is coming to light form
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the Alps, first of all the remains of the highest battlefields in the world, fought during the First World
War.
The onset of alpine pastoral systems in the Eastern Alps
Klaus Oeggl (Botanical Institute, University of Innsbruck); Daniela Festi (Botanical
Institute, University of Innsbruck); Putzer Andreas (Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum)
Since the discovery of the Neolithic glacier mummy “Ötzi” in the nival belt of the main Alpine ridge,
the onset of alpine pasture is matter of a highly controversial debate both in archaeology and in
palaeo-ecology of the Eastern Alps. The implication is that his sojourn in the high-altitudes of the Alps
is considered to be connected with pastoral nomadism. Regrettably any archaeological evidence for the
existence of such Neolithic alpine pastoral systems is missing up to now and the assumption is based
on palynological data only. However, also the palynological record is ambiguous, because pasture
indicators in the alpine regions react positive on grazing as well as on fertilization induced by a higher
runoff of precipitation. Thus alpine pasture indicators reflect both grazing pressure and climatic
change.
Anyhow, alpine pastoral systems are a common practice in Alpine animal husbandry, but from an
economic point of view such a seasonal vertical transhumance is costly. There are three main reasons
for its practice: i) climatic, ii) economic (mainly in connection with population pressure or mining
activities), and iii) cultural ideology. In this study we tested the above mentioned reasons in an
interdisciplinary study on the beginning of pastoral activities in high altitudes in the central part of the
Eastern Alps. This is conducted by palynological analyses of peat deposits situated in the vicinity of the
timberline (1600 – 2400 m a.s.l.) combined with archaeological surveys. The investigated sites are
located in traditional Alpine transhumance regions and aligned on a transect through the central part
of the Eastern Alps. Moreover, isotopic analyses (Sr, O) conducted at high-spatial resolution to retrieve
(sub)seasonal mobility signals were directly conducted on Copper aged sheep/goat molars from the
Vinschgau site of Latsch. Taken together, these studies reveal that grazing pressure is reflected at the
earliest since the Bronze Age, which is corroborated by archaeological findings near the palynologically
investigated sites and isotopic analyses.
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Coastal Mediterranean Mountains: a neglected archaeological register for the study of the first
complex societies
Hector A. Orengo (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of
Cambridge)
During the last years a steady increase in high mountain multidisciplinary studies has put mountain
archaeology in the forefront of landscape-based archaeological research. Regrettably this high
mountain trend has not been matched by research on lower mountain ranges. The lack of
multidisciplinary research on lower mountains is possibly related to their proximity and accessibility
to ancient and modern population centres. These areas have suffered the most intensive human use
and occupation. This has caused deforestation and erosion processes, which have, in turn, contributed
to great difficulties in the archaeological prospection of these areas. Furthermore, the lack of basins
with anaerobic, continuous sedimentary records greatly hinders the adoption of multidisciplinary
approaches. Nonetheless, it is precisely their proximity to ancient population centres and their
continuous occupation history that renders them important archaeological registers for the study of
ancient societies.
This paper will present two case studies from areas located at the extremes of the Mediterranean basin
(Garraf Massif in Barcelona and Palaikastro in Crete) to: (1) illustrate the range of techniques available
for the study of these neglected landscapes and (2) show their great potential for the understanding of
the economy and socioenvironmental relations of the first Mediterranean complex societies.
Landscape Archaeology in Eastern Pyrenees high mountain areas (Segre & Ter valleys): human
activities in the shaping of Mountain Cultural Landscapes.
Josep M. Palet (Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology); Santiago Riera (University of
Barcelona); Hector A. Orengo (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. University
of Cambridge); Arnau Garcia (Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology.
University at Buffalo, SUNY); Ana Ejarque (CNRS, UMR 6042, GEOLAB. Clermont
Université, Université Blaise Pascal)
Since 2004, an integrated palaeoenvironmental and archaeological research programme has been
developed in the Eastern Pyrenees, in the Madriu-Perafita-Claror valley (Andorra), the Cadí range (Alt
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Urgell, Catalonia), and Nuria and Coma de vaca valleys, with the aim of studying the long-term
landscape shaping of Mediterranean high-mountain environments from 1900 to 2600 m a.s.l. This
programme involved extensive surveying, GIS, excavation and radiocarbon dating of archaeological
structures. In each area, more than 400 archaeological structures have been reported ranging from the
Early Neolithic to Modern times.
Archaeological and historical data underline the existence in these areas of diverse land-use and
resource management strategies during the past millennia, which included fire-driven forest openings,
grazing, woodland exploitation (such as resin and charcoal production), mining and melting activities.
This high diversity of activities has leaded to complex cultural landscapes in the high Pyrenean areas.
In addition, multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental studies including sedimentology, micromorphology,
micro and macro charcoal, geochemistry, pollen and other indicators providing a more local
palaeoecological signal. The integration of multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental, archaeological and
historical data has proved to be a priceless tool for assessing local human occupation and the
distinctive nature of highland land-use practices on a micro-regional scale.
The results obtained show an uninterrupted occupation of these high Pyrenean areas from the Early
Neolithic until the present. A methodological approach based on fine spatial and temporal resolution
analysis has allowed the detection of a high variability in human settlement and practices recording,
thus, a high diversity of land-use patterns in the study area and neighbouring valleys.
Evidences of human presence in this highland area are reported during the Mesolithic coinciding with
the 8.2 Kyr BP event. Settlements have been located ca 2500 m a.s.l. during the Early Neolithic.
During the Early and Middle Neolithic human clearances were diversified in its spatial distribution
allowing the recovery of alpine forests after impacts. A major landscape change occurred in the valleys
during the Late Neolithic when the alpine grassland belt expanded and human settlements have been
documented at ca. 2500 m a.s.l. Roman times report a diversification of representative practices
including mining, metallurgy, pine resin exploitation, charcoal production, grazing activities and
livestock, etc. Antiquity is configured as an important period in livestock expansion from the 2nd – 3rd
centuries and during Late Antiquity, especially in the Ter basin. In high Medieval times (9th 10th c.), a
largely grazed landscape resulted in a wide deforestation. Later on, during the modern and
contemporary periods, an intensive transhumant grazing exploitation characterized these valleys land-
use although forest-management practices such as charcoal production, related to iron melting
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activities, continued being present in the archaeological record. The history of this landscape furnishes
new data for the development of management tools for the sustainability of Mediterranean highlands.
Norway's mountain landscapes: national romantic legends and the political economy of
agropastoralism
Christopher Prescott (The Norwegian Institute in Rome, University of Oslo)
Traditional national identities in Norway (and other areas of Scandinavia) have centred on perceptions
of farming, seafaring and seasonal use of the mountains. In terms of the latter, the historical narratives
have incorporated hunting/trapping with roots in the Stone Age, and summer dairy farming/pasturing
with roots in the Iron Age or Medieval period. The ensuing narratives have emphasized tradition, and
practices conservatively determined by stable natural conditions, customary production techniques
and a particular ethno-cultural spirit – a product of millennia of cultural, human and environmental
co-evolution.
A number of field projects in southerly Norway since the 1970s, largely driven by hydro-electric
development, have brought forth a significant archaeological and environmental dataset.
Interpretative consensus has often lagged behind the production of materials and data, emphasizing
reindeer hunting. It is increasingly clear that the mountains were exploited through seasonal
transhumant strategies as of the Late Neolithic Period (2400 BC). As of this time, use of the mountains
was dynamic, integrated in wider historical developments and a central element in the regional
economy supplying a number of products used in various spheres of transactions. Indeed, the uplands
(traditionally perceived as a stable environmental setting) entered an increasingly dynamic phase as of
2400 BC, perhaps instigated through Bell Beaker migration, creating the modern landscape that is
popularly, but erroneously, perceived of as primordial nature.
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From mobile pastoralism to combined mountain economy – the Late Bronze Age in the North
Caucasus
Sabine Reinhold (Eurasia Department of the German Archaeological Institute); Andrey B.
Belinskiy (OOO Nasledie); Dmitrij S. Korobov (Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy
of Sciences)
The 2nd half of the 2nd millennium BC in many regions of Eurasia sees a fundamental shift from the
mobile pastoral economies of the Early and Middle Bronze Ages towards more sedentary forms of
pastoralism. In many parts of Eurasia high mountain environments play a crucial role in this process.
At the northern flank of the Caucasian mountain range this transformation is studied by a German-
Russian team in its long dureé. Due to an excellent visibility of the sites, which are represented by the
ruins of thousands of Late Bronze Age stone built houses, enclosures and other features, a research
strategy could focus on different levels – singular houses and settlements as well as the entire
landscapes as such.
Meanwhile it is possible to follow the whole of this process very closely, both in the economic
perspective of changing patterns of pastoralism as well as in the social dimension. The architecture e.g.
reveals communities that adopt more and more to the demands of a sedentary lifestyle. The layout of
the settlements shift from linear configurations that resemble mobile nomadic camps towards highly
specialized configurations with multifunctional houses that allowed accommodating large herds in
winter. Activity area research using geophysics and microbiological soil analysis allowed very precise
assessments on the location and the quantities of animals in and outside the settlements. GIS and
isotope analysis made it possible to predict and localize the seasonal movement of these animals
within and outside the micro region. The combined mountain economic system that developed
between the 18th and 10th century BC on the North Caucasian plateaus is so far the earliest
documented example of this economy that is today essential to all mountain systems in Eurasia. It
represents a highly complex society that, however, developed a specific corporate social system veiling
social and economic disparities.
15 IEMA 2017
Archaeology of Mountain Landscapes
The Sacred Mount
Phillips Stevens, Jr. (Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Buffalo)
Students of the anthropization of mountain landscapes must look for evidence of ritual activity.
Cultural reverence for striking geologic protruberances – mountains, tors, hills, inselbergs, large
boulders, and such features replicated in human-made mounds – is probably universal. This paper
applies the author’s model of a “vertical dimension” of religious beliefs to understand the universal
belief in elevated divinities, and the conceptualization of a sacred mountain. Some representative
examples from world ethnology, and some possibly universal symbolic themes, are reviewed.
Concepts of the “horned mountain” and the “mountains as breasts” emphasized by art and
architecture historian Vincent Scully, and his argument that some Greek temples were planned as
interactive with their environments, are examined for the possibility of wider ethnological application.
And insights from the anthropological science of cultural ecology are useful in interpreting the layout
of ritual structures vis-à-vis features in mountain landscapes.
Agro- or pastoral thinking about Mid-Mountains Neolithisation
Pawel Valde-Nowak (Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University)
A survey of main views on the significance of European Mid-Mountains for early agrarian groups will
be presented. Former proposals of exclusion of these terrains from the Neolithic ecumena will also be a
matter. It will confront special character of archaeological sources, settlement–geographical
observation, etnographic and paleobotanical evidences. The paper will also stress a bid of recognition
of these terrains as a domain of seasonal moving of groups, most probably pastoral in character.
The archaeology in the last decades, more and more shows a grasping phenomenon of delaying of the
research over the Neolithic, especially in the European Mid-Mountains, like German Mittelgebirge,
Carpathians and Sudety Mountains.
One can easily show entirely different face of archaeology of those terrains, if compared to the classic
centers recognized explicitly by the casus of the chunks of fertile soils arisen out of the loess. The
mentioned lugging can be explained with the ultimate form of the Neolithic settlement trails in the
mountains, if such trails can be registered and actually understood anyway.
16 IEMA 2017
Archaeology of Mountain Landscapes
In the last years the interest of Neolithic relics in the mountains increases. More accurate results of
palynological analysis played a large role to this. Archaeologist still better understand the utmost form
of archaeological remnants from Neolithic in the mountains. There are more evidence for penetration
of such regions already in the early Neolithic. Such findings, as well as the late Neolithic, are not
connected with transitional passing through the mountains, as it thought before. The amount of such
marks in each mountain group is so large, that it is important to take a mountain territories into
serious consideration regarding the everyday live and economy of the Neolithic man.
Hate or love? Exploring the relationship between the marginal landscapes of the Western Taurus
Mountains, SW Anatolia, and past communities.
Ralf Vandam (Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project, Department of Archaeology.
University of Leuven); Patrick T. Willett (Department of Anthropology, State University of
New York at Buffalo); Peter F. Biehl (Department of Anthropology, State University of New
York at Buffalo) & Jeroen Poblome (Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project,
Department of Archaeology, University of Leuven)
Previous archaeological research in the area and generally in Western Turkey has until now mainly
focused on the larger fertile lowland areas (e.g. Burdur Plain). This research revealed numerous
farming settlements from the Neolithic (6500 BC) onwards and illustrated clear distinctive periods of
continuity and collapse in human occupation in these areas. Next to nothing is known about sites in
other landscape units such as remote, high altitude locations, which in contrast to plain areas, are
traditionally considered to be ‘marginal’, as they are not particularly favorable for permanent
habitation. In 2016 the Sagalassos Archaeological Research Project started a new archaeological survey
research in the Western extent of the Taurus mountainous which aims to fill the gap in knowledge by
documenting all human activity in the so-called ‘marginal’ landscapes. With this new research we hope
to investigate how communities operated in these landscapes in terms of subsistence, resource
exploitation and mobility and to assess how different/similar they were in comparison to the city of
Sagalassos and the lowland communities. In this paper will illustrate that marginal landscapes should
be considered as integral parts of the cultural landscape. From early onwards (50.000 BC) until recent
times (Late Ottoman period; 18th - 19th century) we have evidence that people were living and
exploiting these landscapes and that they formed an explicit element in the different lifeways and
17 IEMA 2017
Archaeology of Mountain Landscapes
economic systems of past communities.
Developing a systematic approach to the archaeological study of mountain landscapes: the
Raganello Basin experience
Martijn Van Leusen (Groningen Institute of Archaeology)
The systematic archaeological study of mountain landscapes requires significant changes to the
approaches we might be used to in lowland areas. On the plus side, mountains are where we would
expect to find the clearest evidence of any major changes in demographic pressure (‘boom-bust
cycles’), and where the degree of anthropogenic postdepositional disturbance is generally less. But
then again, the lower accessibility and ground visibility, and the stronger natural slope processes,
make it much harder to systematically collect good archaeological data from mountain landscapes. The
upshot is that we must place less reliance on the systematic coverage by fieldwalking of large
contiguous areas or transects, and more on systematic geoarchaeological studies leading to an
understanding of how gradational processes affecting the formation and postdepositional history of
the archaeological record. I will use a range examples from the recently concluded research program
‘Rural Life in Prehistoric Italy’ (RLP), conducted in the Raganello Basin in northern Calabria (Italy), to
show how we tried to develop a systematic approach to the investigation of mountain landscapes and
to discuss implications for best practice. Examples will include the exploratory use of geophysical
survey, the use of a stratified sampling approach to reduce biases in both the ‘production’ and the
study of the archaeological record, the use of field experiments to assess the robustness of survey
results, and the computer simulation of slope processes. I will argue that unless we develop a
systematic approach to the study of mountain landscapes, we will remain at the mercy of a series of
unquantifiable biases that will prevent us from truly understanding its archaeological record.
18 IEMA 2017
Archaeology of Mountain Landscapes
Archaeology of a sacred mountain: longue duree, mobile pastoralism, and monumental landscapes
in Eastern Eurasia
Cecilia Dal Zovo (Institute of Heritage Sciences. Spanish National Research Council)
In this paper, I would like to review some significant aspects of my ten-year investigation project on
the monumental landscape of the Ikh Bogd Uul- the ‘Great Sacred Mountain- in the eastern Altai
ridges that separate Mongolian central plains from the Gobi desert. In particular, I will discuss the
benefits of adopting a multidisciplinary, holistic, and longue durée perspective in studying pastoral
mobility, monumentality, and rituality of the mountain landscapes of northern Eurasia. In order to
understand the construction of the cultural landscape of Ikh Bogd Uul Mountain, as a multifaceted
and long-term phenomenon, I developed an integral research approach that combined manifold
sources with the methodological contributions of anthropology, ethnography, history of religions, GIS
technology, landscape archaeology, and archaeoastronomy. In this way, I could investigate the deep
interconnection between mobile pastoralism and the stratified elaboration of sacred geographies,
which emerges in the ritual practices, the traditional cosmologies, and the pattern of seasonal
movements of the local communities since early times. In my investigation, I documented and
analysed several hundreds of previously unknown late Bronze Age and Iron Age mounds on the Ikh
Bogd Uul Mountain. These funerary monuments have a complex cosmologic and calendric symbolism
and in all likelihood also functioned as astronomic and ritual sites. Through the quantitative analysis
of the mounds and their relation with the materialisation of reiterated spatial choices across the
mountain (pastoral paths), I show how the powerful spatial and symbolic values associated to the
ancient burials, as well as the ancient definition of mobility in the pastoral landscape, likely percolated
into the sacred and pastoral geographies of the local communities of Ikh Bogd Uul Mountain over
time.
19 IEMA 2017
Agro-pastoral landscapes characterize not only upland
plains or irrigated areas around water courses, but they
also define most mountain landscapes, sometimes con-
sidered as “marginal lands” when the territories of urban
centers are concerned. However, at least a fifth of the ter-
restrial surface could be defined as mountain areas, host-
ing a fifth of the human population and providing sus-
tainment for a much larger percentage. Bearing this in
mind it is not a surprise to know that mountain areas
have been transited, inhabited, exploited and conceptual-
ized by humans since the very beginning of the species.
Due to the multiple factors and relationships involved,
landscape-shaping - not only in mountain areas - is an
extremely complex subject. Landscape studies are part of
a wide range of disciplines such as History, Archaeology,
Anthropology, Geography, Geology, Ecology, Economics,
and Paleo-environmental Studies. In this research con-
text, interdisciplinary and diachronic approaches have a
great potential and they are a practical reality in nowa-
days research projects about mountain Landscapes.
Fieldwork developed during the last decades has changed
our knowledge about the history of mountain environ-
ments. The 10th International Visiting Scholar Conference
at the Institute for European and Mediterranean Archae-
oloogy (IEMA) at the University at Buffalo will gather re-
searchers who in different geographical areas (in both
Eurasia and the Americas) have made significant contri-
butions about land-use in mountain areas and human ac-
tivities in the shaping of mountain cultural landscapes.
The conference is generously co-sponsored by UB’s Department of His-tory and the Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology (ICAC)